32blit Retro-inspired Homebrew Handheld with Open-source Firmware

Long time no see! I appreciate I've not been very involved in the community for... basically forever... and have become a lurker. Life and work caught up with me. I want to swoop back in and share what we've been working on at Pimoroni, though, because I think it'll be very relevant the interests of many people here:

Any questions, please shoot! I've had to tinker away in almost total secret on 32blit for months now, so I'm super excited to share this and see how people react.

Omitted in lieu of keeping the cost and complexity down. Since it’s entirely designed for new homebrew and not to support existing games (ie: it’s not intended to be an emulator handheld although I’d wager someone will find a way) they’re not needed.

Pico-8 games work wonders with two face buttons and a directional pad!

I thought it looked great, but I was disappointed by the lack of SD card. Whilst i was told you could flash multiple programmes at once, having an SD card would mean being able to load resources (think streaming mp3, or storing Pico 8 carts)

SD card is something we considered- but since this thing will have gobs of - with any luck mounted as mass storage - flash on it, it will be redundant anyway for the majority of users. I think SD would more likely find uses among those who get emulators up and running (if they do!) and not necessarily for our main “diy homebrew games” purpose. It also can potentially cause differentiation in the hardware- too- with varying SD card sizes. We wanted everyone to have the same device so it’s easy and simple to share code/games, rather than “you need XYZ version or a certain sized SD card.”

It’s a delicate balance between be-all-things-to-all-people and really focussing down on our core idea! Cost is- again- a big factor and we wanted to keep the unit cost down. It’s not easy for us- a small UK-based business- to stay competitive with mass produced handhelds out of China so its best to keep the price low and double down on what makes us unique.

I can *totally* see why SD slots and Shoulder Buttons are probably the #1 (next to USB-C for some reason?) most desired features, though!

Thank you. We have *plenty* to do on the software and assets front to make this really rock - not to mention we’d like to live stream some dev tinkering and demos.

I’d love to see shoulder buttons- but only because I have a design for them which I think is absolutely genius but in reality probably sucks. (Or has been done before and I haven’t noticed)

This has been an interesting journey for me because prior attempts to program games just ended with me drowning in options and getting nowhere much. Now I’ve written a couple of near complete games just to test our engine and learned a whole bunch of concepts I’d never have thought I’d grok in the interim.

@ClockworkCoder I hope you have as much fun with it as I'm having with my prototype unit!

@pmprog -
1. We're seriously considering routing whatever pins are left over onto some kind of internal "hack" header. There are surprisingly few left, though, since the screen takes a whole bunch
2. No headphone socket
3. Volume will be controlled in software

For a general sense of why we made these choices- we're aiming more at scaled-up ArduBoy than scaled-down GCW Zero.

That's what the CHIP people were going for with their pocketchip. I have one, and it pretty much delivers on that promise. Like you they focused on learning and included lots of programming tools and tutorials. Sure, dome switches make terrible gaming controls, but otherwise it was an interesting and (IMHO) successful experiment. Unfortunately, they've gone bust and stock has been non-existent for quite a while. Turns out that as cool as something like this is, the demand and staying power for such a niche device is fairly limited. I can't even remember the last time I used mine. I have 3 or 4 extra chip modules still in the boxes that I never got around to finding a use for.

Please don't take this as an attempt to dissuade you from this project, I just hope you're not dumping your life savings into it. Ask Craig how that plan works out

Haha @Chip yes I have a PocketCHIP too- the low-priced CHIP board was - I believe - a pretty key catalyst to the release and aggressive pricing of the Pi Zero so we owe it a lot!

No life savings at risk- we’re a 6 (I think? Time goes so fast) year old company with dozens of successful products (mostly Pi related) keeping our lights on. This project is as much a passion project that we want to see, as it is something we expect to make money. We won’t live and die by this, but I’ll be damned if we don’t have a blast making it happen! It’s addictive! I have to remember that I have other priorities to our existing products and customers